Saturday, August 3, 2019
The Evolution of Ethics Essay -- essays papers
The Evolution of Ethics      A goal implicit in human evolution is survival; thus, humanity directs some of  its energy toward creating a state of peace to achieve the necessary efficiency  and conservation of energy to survive in a hostile and sometimes unpredictable  world.    The foundation of the emergence of rule systems in the world is built upon  centuries of reasoned insight and personal experiences that reveal which actions  are better than others, which are productive, and which are disruptive and  should be avoided. As efficient actions reveal themselves to an evolving  society, its people develop the means to make productive choices between one  type of action and another. Some choices are decidedly better than others. This  prioritizing of human actions into efficient hierarchies establishes the  foundations of rule systems which later refine themselves into more  sophisticated systems of morals, manners and statutory laws. All these systems  have a tendency to address the fundamental need of the human species to survive  and avoid the common fate of extinction by conserving energy and directing  social attention towards more productive kinds of behavior. It could be said  that as civilization approaches the ideal of efficiency, the harmony that  follows from efficient and thoughtful actions inspires a state of peace that  exponentially increases the chances of human civilization surviving over long  periods of time.    Social change has more or less followed the more reasoned logic and experiences  of people. Change is not always perfect. However, as people experience more and  learn more about their world through formal education, they have more resources  by which they can make judgments about the behavior of their fellow humans.  Knowledge of the past lends to enlightened minds a knowledge of the future.  Common education and experiences inspire the emergence of informal belief  systems, clarifying what appears to be acceptable behavior and what is not.  Observations that endure centuries of reasoned scrutiny integrate ultimately  into the cultural ethic. As a rule of thumb, an action that contributes to the  disorganization of society is often considered "wrong" and that which  contributes to the organization of society "right." Behaviors that corrupt the  peace, prosperity, and productivity of a society are generally discouraged as  "wrong," in favor of behaviors which contri...              ...es. Rule  systems help keep people in their "right mind" instead of going "out of their  minds" through excess. People who are repeatedly "out of their minds" have less  chance of surviving and surviving well than people who remain true to their  original personality. Some behaviors corrupt the efficiency and social  compatibility of people more than other behaviors. Some part of the evolution of  ethical systems monitors the growth of potentially harmful behaviors and looks  for methods to suppress them.    Rules help to reign in human passion as progress demands finer and finer  delineations of labor, resources, and authority. The visceral compulsions of  humans to survive rather than perish commands intelligent people to try to hold  their society together and to keep people and their passions from tearing it  apart. Survival places an imperative to be sensible enough to stay above the  threshold of extinction as a species. This evolutionary process inspires finer  and finer details of order, and is first evident in the moral senses of  reasonable people who push for better rules to keep society orderly. To do this  they must look from past experience into the future.          		  		  Bibliography:    		                      
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